Tags
Language
Tags
July 2025
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
29 30 1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31 1 2
    Attention❗ To save your time, in order to download anything on this site, you must be registered 👉 HERE. If you do not have a registration yet, it is better to do it right away. ✌

    KoalaNames.com
    What’s in a name? More than you think.

    Your name isn’t just a label – it’s a vibe, a map, a story written in stars and numbers.
    At KoalaNames.com, we’ve cracked the code behind 17,000+ names to uncover the magic hiding in yours.

    ✨ Want to know what your name really says about you? You’ll get:

    🔮 Deep meaning and cultural roots
    ♈️ Zodiac-powered personality insights
    🔢 Your life path number (and what it means for your future)
    🌈 Daily affirmations based on your name’s unique energy

    Or flip the script – create a name from scratch using our wild Name Generator.
    Filter by star sign, numerology, origin, elements, and more. Go as woo-woo or chill as you like.

    💥 Ready to unlock your name’s power?

    👉 Tap in now at KoalaNames.com

    Tabu Ley Rochereau - The Voice Of Lightness - Congo Classics 1961-1977 (2007)

    Posted By: Ibiza
    Tabu Ley Rochereau - The Voice Of Lightness - Congo Classics 1961-1977 (2007)

    Tabu Ley Rochereau - The Voice Of Lightness - Congo Classics 1961-1977
    African rumba | mp3 320 Kbps | 2 CD | 343 MB
    Sterns Music 2007

    From the mid-sixties to the mid-Eighties, Kinshasa-raised Tabu Ley Rochereau was the premier singer in sub-Saharan Africa. His supple, soft-textured tenor defined the Congolese rumba style known as soukous almost as much as the billowy, coruscating guitarists he deployed as a bandleader-arranger, and his songwriting was both melodically inspired and commercially omnivorous. For most American listeners, this superb pre-1977 double CD will introduce not just Rochereau but soukous, which, though it dominated Afropop into the Nineties, has been marketed sporadically here. There are plenty of the multiguitar sebene grooves that soukous fans cried out for, but the set's pervasive pleasure is lovely melodies filigreed with guitar that's delicate and propulsive. The excellent notes make clear that, though Rochereau had plenty of Latin-lover Lothario in him, he sang about many things: pride of race and place, his mother, his mortality, laundry soap if the soap company would pay for it and, on the onomatopoeic "Aon Aon," wah-wah guitar.
    01. Kelya
    02. K.J
    03. Succes African Jazz
    04. Pesa le Tout
    05. Nalembi Nalembi
    06. N´daya Paradis
    07. Tabalissimo
    08. Mama Ida
    09. Mireille Mwana
    10. Mokolo Nakokufa
    11. Savon Omo
    12. Lily Mwana ya Quartier
    13. Kasala
    14. Monano
    15. Ana Mokoy
    16. Mokitani ya Wendo
    17. Christine
    18. Songo + Songo = Songi-songi

    01. Aon Aon
    02. Kimakango mpe Libala
    03. Mongali
    04. Omanga
    05. Nzale
    06. Kaful Mayay
    07. Karibou ya Bintou
    08. Mbanda Nayei
    09. Adeito (1&2)
    10. Yombe
    11. Likambo ya Mokanda